Re: February 30th 2000

From: Thomas E. Dodd /CSDC (ted@cypress.com)
Date: Fri Jan 14 2000 - 12:37:47 EST


"Mike A. Harris" wrote:
> I say we do away with dates completely, and create a new SI time
> measurement that fits into the theory of Relativity well or
> Quantum Mechanics. Say some number that is the number of
> electrons orbiting a 1 meter rod of pure uranium or something
> equaly worthy of an ISO standard due to it's cool geekness
> factor. We can begin measuring time in those units after that.
> We pick a starting point say a year from now, and from then on we

Hey Mike,

Isn't the second already the SI unit for time?
look at the NIST page here.
http://physics.nist.gov/GenInt/Time/atomic.html
"In 1967 the cesium atom's natural frequency was formally recognized
as the new international unit of time: the second was defined as
exactly 9,192,631,770 oscillations or cycles of the cesium atom's
resonant frequency replacing the old second that was defined in terms
of the earth's motions. The second quickly became the physical
quantity
most accurately measured by scientists. The best primary cesium
standards
now keep time to about one-millionth of a second per year."

We just need to start using the 10^(3n) prefixes
withe it on the positive side. We already
use ms (milisecond), ns (nanosecond), us (microsecond)
and such. Now we need ks (kilosecond), Ms (megasecond),
etc...

But changing the name would be cool. Lest seperate
time for angle measurments :)

        -Thomas

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